In our stock
update released in March (See Report: Competition caps earnings growth),
we had guided that the increased competition in the cement space with
onboarding of additional capacity of 1.5 million tons by CCNN in the North West
and 3 million tons by BUA Group in Obu Edo State will limit volume upside in
Nigeria over 2019, with price play being the new game for volume accretion. For
the Rest of Africa, we mentioned that the graduated competition in Cameroun
(with the entrance of a new competitor), South Africa and capacity max-out in
Senegal suggests slower volume growth over our forecast period.

Dangote
Cement Plc (Dangcem) Q1 2019 result released over the weekend validated our
postulations, with the group revenue declining 0.8% YoY to N240 billion (in
line with our forecast of N238 billion), largely emanating from Nigeria. Meanwhile,
surprises in the opex and finance income lines pushed PBT (-27.2% YoY) much
lower than we expected to N78.9 billion. However, the high base of effective
tax rate in the prior year, resulted in much softer decline for EPS – printed
at N3.54 (-16.5% YoY) from N4.23 in Q1 18.

Competition dwarf volume growth

As mentioned
above, the group revenue slipped marginally in Q1 19 following price erosion by
3% YoY (or N1,165 per ton) as competition more than offset gains from improved cementitious
consumption. In Nigeria, Dangcem grew volume by less than 1% YoY, which is
expected, however, alarming when compared with the hefty volumes sold by CCNN
over the same period. Coupled with the decline in price by 2.9% YoY (CCNN: -2%
YoY), Nigeria revenue came in lower by 2.3% YoY. This resulted in a decline in
Dangcem’s market share to ~64% from 66% in Q1 18 and 65% as at FY 18.

For the rest
of Africa, volumes grew by only 5% following tough market play in Cameroon
(-10% YoY), South Africa (-18.3% YoY) and persisting logistical issues in Ghana
(-39% YoY), all of which offset stronger growth in Congo (+49% YoY), Ethiopia
(+19% YoY), Sierra Leone (+76% YoY), Tanzania (+128% YoY) and Zambia (+12% YoY)
that impressed better than we expected (NB: Following resolution of the energy issues in Tanzania with the
new gas plant, and settlement of the civil unrest in Ethiopia.).Similar to
Nigeria, prices across Pan-African market was also down 2.2% to N29,941/ton,
with revenue rising by just 2.5% YoY. Overall, total group volume was up 2.1%
to 6.3mt, while overall average revenue per ton (-3% YoY) printed at
N37,892/ton.

Price war taking a toll on margin

Contrary to
the decline in revenue, COGS was up 2.2% YoY to N99 billion in the quarter due
to lower cost absorption and increase in staff costs. This led to a 121bps YoY
contraction in gross margin to 58.6%. Going by breakdown, manufacturing cost in
Nigeria was 5% higher YoY, while it remained flat in the Rest of Africa despite
the higher volumes. As a result, Nigeria gross margin contracted 211 bps to
71%, while it expanded 178bps to 29% in the Rest of Africa.

Higher diesel cost and increased fleet magnify opex

Operating
cost rose by 28% YoY, weighed mostly by a sharp jump in distribution expenses
(+34% YoY). In a bid to push volumes, there was an increase in truck fleets,
which coupled with the relatively higher diesel prices (+7.9% YoY) translated
to higher haulage costs. However, volumes growth failed to match the increase
in costs, thus pushing the S&D per ton higher to N6,250 from N4,760 in Q1
18. Admin expense grew at a softer pace of 12% to N13.2 billion, with cost to
income ratio rising 49 bps YoY to 22%.

At the group
level, EBITDA margin contracted 11% to 46.5% from 52% in Q1 last year. Both
Nigeria and Pan Africa business posted contraction in EBITDA margins by 61% and
17% (from 66% and 19% in Q1 18) respectively.

Further
putting pressure on earnings is a net finance cost of N9.4 billion posted in
the quarter from a net finance income of N4.6 billion recorded in Q1 18. The
income last year was largely due to Forex gain of N12.5 billion, which reversed
to a loss of N3.1 billion this year. Excluding FX impact, net finance cost was
lower at N6.3 billion in Q1 19, from N7.9 billion in Q1 18.

DANGCEM
trades at a P/E and EV/EBITDA of 8.43x and 6.26x compared to Bloomberg Middle
and East Africa Peers at 9.9x and 11.0x respectively. Our last communicated FV
of N248. translates to a BUY rating on the stock. Our model is under review.

The post ‘Initial View - Dangote Cement Plc - Mounting competition, margin erosion, declining earnings was authored by and first appeared in ARM Research Report on Monday, 29 April 2019. Coverage Analyst is Janet Ogunkoya and she can be contacted via Janet.ogunkoya@arm.com.ng

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